Chicago Sun-Times

Plame affair showed us value of government leaks

- PHIL KADNER Email: philkadner@ gmail. com

To learn something important about government leaks, go online and read the stories about the Valerie Plame Affair.

This was a scandal involving one of the most notorious leaks in U. S. history. The name of CIA covert operative Plame was released to the news media because her husband had written an op- ed article for the New York Times contradict­ing President George W. Bush’s assertion that Saddam Hussein had purchased uranium in Niger that could have allowed him to build a nuclear bomb.

It is mostly forgotten now, but that assertion was one of the key reasons given for invading Iraq in 2003. It was false. Plame’s husband, Joe Wilson, had been sent to Africa by the CIA to investigat­e the claim in 2002 before the Iraq War began. He reported back that it wasn’t true, but then heard the president tell the American public that Iraq had indeed purchased the uranium.

Wilson responded by writing an article in the New York Times headlined, “What I didn’t find in Africa.”

People inside the Bush administra­tion didn’t like that. So they leaked the informatio­n that Wilson, who had been a special assistant on Africa to Bill Clinton, was dispatched to Niger at the recommenda­tion of his wife, who had worked for the CIA. The implicatio­n was this was an attempt by Democrats to undermine the Republican administra­tion and the CIA was somehow involved in the conspiracy.

There was outrage. Who within the government could have leaked this informatio­n? Who exposed a CIA operative jeopardizi­ng the lives of both her sources and other agents? This was treason.

Then U. S. Attorney General John Ashcroft recused himself from the CIA leak investigat­ion. His deputy attorney general, a fellow named James B. Comey ( yes, the same guy who would become FBI director) acting in Ashcroft’s place appointed Patrick Fitzgerald special counsel in charge of the investigat­ion ( yes, the same guy who would become the U. S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois and eventually bring charges against Rod Blagojevic­h).

The Plame Affair reads like something out of a complicate­d spy novel.

There are claims that Wilson lied and didn’t find out anything definitive in his trip to Africa.

There are reports that a deputy secretary of state under Bush leaked the informatio­n about Plame to columnist Robert Novak in order to discredit Wilson.

A reporter for the New York Times was sent to prison for refusing to reveal her sources, but Novak, who first revealed Plame’s connection to the CIA, was not.

Lewis “Scooter” Libby, a top aide to Vice President Dick Cheney, was found guilty of perjury, making false statements and obstructio­n of justice.

But Libby was never charged with leaking informatio­n and Bush spared him prison time by commuting his sentence in 2007. It was a decision hailed by conservati­ves, who now drone on about the dangers posed by government employees who leak informatio­n to the news media.

And that’s why I mention all of this today. During congressio­nal investigat­ions allegedly designed to find out the extent of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presiden- tial election, Republican­s continue to focus on leaks damaging to the Trump administra­tion.

There have always been leaks in government. Always will be. And many of them originate from government officials seeking to discredit critics, or destroy their rivals within the government.

The only thing learned from the Plame investigat­ion is that our own government often churns out disinforma­tion for public consumptio­n, just as the Russians have done.

This country ought to be focusing on the Russians and how to stop them from meddling in future U. S. elections. Chasing after leaks has proven to be a waste of time, money and resources.

If Fitzgerald has a different view, I would be happy to hear it.

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 ??  ?? Former CIA covert agent Valerie Plame Wilson testifies before Congress in 2007.
| AFP/ GETTY IMAGES
Former CIA covert agent Valerie Plame Wilson testifies before Congress in 2007. | AFP/ GETTY IMAGES

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